Reading the Pyramid

The layers or levels in the pyramid should be implemented from bottom to top, building from the basics to some advanced and very specific marketing / communication techniques.

The bands of color are proportionate to the amount of resources you should spend at each level. More on Responsive Design, less on a Texting Campaign.

Level 1: Distribution

The first step in your mobile strategy should be to audit and if needed, improve, the distribution of your organizations information.

Where does information about your hotel, restaurant or attraction live in terms of mobile?

How is it discovered?

Is it accurate?

Start with the big directories of local content first: Google and Bing.

After the whole Apple Maps snafu, the new Google Maps App for iOS (iPhone), was downloaded 10 million times in a 48 hour period. Without question, Google Maps is one of the most popular, downloaded and utilized apps on any mobile device. Make sure your information can be found and is correct.

Next, move to the major social and geosocial networks.

Use getlisted.org for a quick (and free) search of your current presence. Or, sign-up with a company like SweetIQ for a more robust local marketing monitoring solution.

Put in the required and repeated effort at this level to ensure that your content is available, correct and useful.

Level 2: Landing Page

Organizations will either skip this level, temporarily wait at this level (for a web development update project) or stop at this level, but you should understand why a mobile landing page is important for your mobile strategy.

Now that you have built a solid foundation of distribution for your information, people will be clicking from Google Maps to your website.

And you need to ensure, at a minimum, that the first interaction with your website is a good one.

When you rebuild or update your current digital content to include a responsive design, don’t start by bringing everything over from the old site.

Start with a clean slate.

And start with a mobile / responsive focus.

Advanced Mobile Strategy

Up until this point, the previous levels represent a nearly universal mobile strategy. But the next three levels required a specific use case, consumer need and business goal to be successful.

Executing any of these levels simply because a competitor is doing it, or it looks cool, is a waste of your mobile strategy.

Level 4: Mobile Application

The majority of DMOs, CVBs, hotels, restaurants, attractions, museums, water parks, graveyards, Space Needles and other tourism-related businesses do not need a mobile application.

iPhone, iPad or Android.

You simply don’t need one.

Why? Because the majority of the mobile goals you need to accomplish can be completed effectively with a mobile website.

Only organizations with a specific consumer need or specific use case should build a mobile app.

For example, the banking app on your phone likely contains a deposit by phone feature…where you snap a picture of your check and deposit it via the magic of the internet…a feature that would have been complex and costly, if not impossible, if built as a mobile website.

Strong consumer need, strong use case.

If you are considering a mobile application, ensure that you have a strong consumer need, a clear use case scenario and defined goals.

Level 5: Text Campaign

Why? Because consumers view texting from a different perspective than mobile applications or email. It is a personal communication tool. Heavily guarded against spam. And for many younger Americans, their preferred method of communication.

While there are certain use cases where a SMS campaign would be a solid strategy, those are few and far between. Which is why text campaigns sit at the top of the pyramid.

Few of our peers should attempt them, and their overall place in your mobile strategy should be small in proportion to a responsive site and mobile distribution.

Level 6: Augmented Reality

Augmented Reality or AR is a fascinating example of technology merging with the real world. Previously highlighted via mobile, now being carried by the development of Google Glass.

But for 99% of you, our peers, potential readers, AR is not a topic that should appear in your mobile strategic plan.

The technology is simply too young, with too much ongoing development, for you to consider at this point.

In fact, the few examples of AR technology currently in the marketplace commonly utilize directory content to populate the experience.

The same directory content you should be populating and managing at level 1.

Your Mobile Strategy

While your mobile strategy may contain different elements or tactics, we are confident that the majority of tourism organizations…DMOs, attractions or hotels…should follow the structure and approach of the mobile strategy pyramid.